August 31, 2016 11:45 am

By AGENCE FRANCE PRESSE, Pyongyang, Democratic People’s Republic of Korea, Aug 31 – North Korea has executed a vice premier for showing disrespect during a meeting presided over by leader Kim Jong-Un, South Korea said Wednesday, after reports that he fell asleep.

The regime also banished two other senior officials, Seoul said, the latest in a slew of punishments Kim is believed to have ordered in what analysts say is an attempt to tighten his grip on power.

Kim was killed by a firing squad in July as “an anti-party, anti-revolutionary agitator,” added an official at the ministry, who declined to be named.

“Kim Yong-Jin was denounced for his bad sitting posture when he was sitting below the rostrum” during a session of North Korea’s parliament, and then underwent an interrogation that revealed other “crimes”, the official told reporters.

The mass-selling JoongAng Ilbo reported on Tuesday that top regime figures had been punished, but identified the education official by a different name.

“He incurred the wrath of Kim after he dozed off during a meeting presided over by Kim,” it quoted a source as saying.

Professor Yang Moo-Jin at the University of North Korean Studies said the vice premier’s execution could be indirectly verified when Pyongyang’s state media reveals the names of attendees at the government’s anniversary ceremony on September 9.

That confirmation will be important; Seoul in February said North Korean military chief of staff Ri Yong-Gil had been executed — only for Ri to turn up at a party rally in May.

– Uncle –

South Korea’s Yonhap news agency put the number of party officials executed during Kim Jong-Un’s rule at over 100.

The most notorious case was that of Kim’s uncle and onetime No. 2 Jang Song-Thaek, who was executed for charges including treason and corruption in December 2013.

In April 2015, it was reported that Kim had his defence minister Hyon Yong-Chol summarily executed with an anti-aircraft gun.

Cheong Seong-Chang, a senior researcher at the private Sejong Institute, said the “reign of terror” that is characteristic of a Stalinist state showed no sign of abating under Kim.

“But the intensity of the reign of terror depends on changes to the internal and external political environment”, Cheong said.

Reports of the latest execution coincide with a series of high-profile defections from the North.

North Korea’s deputy ambassador to Britain sought refuge in the South with his family, the unification ministry said earlier this month.

Thae Yong-Ho was driven by “disgust for the North Korean regime” and concerns for his family’s future, it said.

Twelve waitresses and their manager who had been working at a North Korea-themed restaurant in China also made headlines when they arrived in the South in April as the largest group defection for years.

About 10 North Korean diplomats made it to the South in the first half of this year alone, Yonhap said, quoting informed sources.

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